Woyome Reacts Angrily To SC Ruling...Accuses Media Of "Twisting" Facts

Embattled businessman, Alfred Agbesi Woyome, has strongly denied media reports that his lawyers have been referred to the Ghana Legal Council for disciplinary action to be taken against them. The Supreme Court on Friday ordered construction firm Waterville Holdings to refund all sums paid it in the controversial GH�51 million judgement debt case to the Government of Ghana. The decision followed a suit by former Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Martin Amidu against the company and two others, businessman Alfred Agbesi Woyome and Austro-Invest Limited to recover huge sums he said were illegally paid to the respondents. Austro-Invest was later struck out of the suit following a revelation that the company was liquidated in Switzerland on July 26, 2011. Waterville Holdings, one of the companies which spearheaded the construction of some stadia in Ghana ahead of the 2008 Africa Cup of Nations, was paid the award after dragging the Government of Ghana to Court in 2009. In a unanimous decision by a nine-member Bench presided over by Justice Professor Date-Baah, the Court ruled that Waterville Holdings was not deserving of the judgment award. The court held that the payments involved contracts that required parliamentary approval, a process it said was side-stepped and therefore rendered the contract unconstitutional. The court also indicted lawyers for Waterville and Alfred Agbesi Woyome for failing to do due diligence in their clients� cases and consequently referred the conduct of the lawyers to the General Legal Council for disciplinary action. According to the court, though the law firm was right to defend their client, they should have considered their ethical obligation in the matter. This was after Mr. Amidu raised an issue that �they [lawyers] knew very well the case was not a very good one yet, they went ahead to defend the defendants.� But Mr Woyome claims the reports are inaccurate.